1. After averaging only 57.5 points in two NCAA tournament games last week, Dayton showed it could play some offense Thursday night.

The Flyers had 13 assists on 15 first-half baskets and finished with 19 assists on their 28 field goals. Dayton's 19 assists compared to nine turnovers was the difference in the game as Stanford had 10 assists and 12 turnovers.

2. The other guys on Jabari Parker's three-time Illinois state champion Simeon squad can play a little bit of basketball as well. After watching freshman Kendall Pollard score a team-high eight first-half points on the way to a season-high 12 for Dayton, it is obvious. The 6-foot-6 Pollard has some experience against trees like Stanford has. In his senior season in high school, he stood toe-to-toe with 6-foot-10 Cliff Alexander, the top 2014 recruit. Pollard also spent practice time guarding Parker, the Duke phenom who earned ACC Player of the Year honors and is the favorite to be National Freshman of the Year.

3. Let's hope that everyone in Dayton got home safely after this celebration.

4. If NBA scouts were not paying attention when he scored a school record 43 points earlier this year, Wisconsin's Frank Kaminsky should have their attention now. While NBAdraft.net does not list Kaminsky in the 2014 or 2015 mock drafts, the 6-foot-11 junior led the Badgers in scoring and rebound this season. Against Baylor on Thursday, Kaminsky took the ball at 7-foot-1 Isaiah Austin and showed he was the better inside player. Kaminsky hit 8 of 11 field goals for 19 points and blocked six shots.

5. For a 6-foot-7 player, Stanford's Josh Huestis is an incredible shot blocker. The senior from Montana had four blocks in his final college game to finish with a school record 190, destroying the mark set by 7-foot-1 Tim Young (167) in his four seasons with the Cardinal.

6. Wisconsin did a great job of shooting the ball ... from the field, at least. The Badgers shot 26-for-50 (52 percent) from the field, but only 11-for-20 (55 percent) from the free-throw line.

7. San Diego State's Josh Davis looked like the second-coming of Michael Cage. Cage, the Aztecs' career leader in rebounds, played for five NBA teams, most notably the Los Angeles Clippers. Cage made a name for himself with his ability to get rebounds and led the NBA in rebounds per game in 1988. Davis, the current Aztec rebounding leader (10 per game), grabbed 11 boards in the first half and 14 total during San Diego State's 70-64 loss to Arizona. Getting to the glass is nothing new for Davis, who averaged 10.7 rebounds for Tulane last season.

8. Shaquille O'Neal delivered CBS's "Tweet of the Night" and ignited the best television we've seen from Greg Gumbel and crew so far this tournament:

9. I wonder how Arizona grad Steve Kerr ended up as the television analyst in the West Region (with top seed Arizona) and UCLA grad Reggie Miller helped call the Bruins loss to Florida? They both did a good job of not being homers on the call.

10. According to the over/under posted on CBSSports.com, both South Region games and the Arizona win over San Diego State finished over. Only Wisconsin's 69-52 win over Baylor finished under.